74W average and ~110W max, when stock or power limits removed.SO basically normal gaming etc will never see those high temps, only in stress tests? because thats what i was thinking, people are being dumb and stressing their systems and then be surprised that they actually succeeded.
This is what everybody gets backwards.But, yes, a 13900K can pull 253W stock. This is beyond most air coolers to handle, and requires water cooling. This is before overclocking.
This only happens if the mobo is set up for it, most mobos run the CPU full blast all of the time. You have to set this by hand.13600K tops out at 181W stock. A large air cooler like an NH-D15 could handle that during the stock boost period. It settles down to 125W for its base clocks.
Stock everything is OC in most cases because mobo makers put all settings up to 11, you will have to either hunt for a mobo that uses actual intel stock settings or you will have to change bios settings yourself.I don't want to OC btw, just stock everything
This is the second thread I've seen you start regarding this question.
First, where do you live? Is it a hot climate or temperate.
What is your budget for the build?
This is what everybody gets backwards.
It can only pull 253W if the rest of the system is up to it.
You don't have to make the rest of the system up to handling 253W if you don't want the CPU to use up 253W.
Also as already stated most normal things a common user would do do not hit that limit.
This only happens if the mobo is set up for it, most mobos run the CPU full blast all of the time. You have to set this by hand.
Stock everything is OC in most cases because mobo makers put all settings up to 11, you will have to either hunt for a mobo that uses actual intel stock settings or you will have to change bios settings yourself.
Make sure the board has decent VRM's and use a decent cpu cooler. There's plenty of B660 boards that will work fine with that cpu although only the Gigabyte and Asus ROG B660 boards allow you to update to the latest bios in order to run a 13 gen cpu without having to install the cpu, memory and gpu.I have seen many people making this claims and some even saying to not buy a B660 or B760 mobo because it will not handle the CPU well, is this remotely true?
I don't want to OC btw, just stock everything, I want to get a 13600k.
What is your budget for a board and cpu cooler and what country are you located?I have seen many people making this claims and some even saying to not buy a B660 or B760 mobo because it will not handle the CPU well, is this remotely true?
I don't want to OC btw, just stock everything, I want to get a 13600k.
In all core loads like Benchmarks...yes. But in normal things, no. As far as I know real world power usage and temps on 13th gen are pretty darned good. I'm on AMD Zen 3 but that was a matter of timing, had I waited a few weeks I might very well be on 12th gen Intel, and I would be fine with that.
74W average and ~110W max, when stock or power limits removed.SO basically normal gaming etc will never see those high temps, only in stress tests? because thats what i was thinking, people are being dumb and stressing their systems and then be surprised that they actually succeeded.